Adina L. Roskies CURRICULUM VITAE

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Adina L. Roskies CURRICULUM VITAE Department of Philosophy 316 Thornton Hall Dartmouth College Hanover NH, 03755 Office telephone: (603) 646-2112 Email address: adina.roskies@dartmouth.edu EDUCATION: Yale Law School, New Haven, CT. M.S.L., 2014. Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA. Ph.D. in Philosophy, 2004. University of California at San Diego, La Jolla, CA. Ph. D. in Neurosciences & Cognitive Science, 1995. M.S. in Neuroscience, 1992. M.A. in Philosophy, 1991. Yale University, New Haven, CT. B.A. in Humanities, Distinction in the Major, Summa cum laude. 1988. EMPLOYMENT: Academic Positions: Dartmouth College: Professor, Department of Philosophy (July 1, 2013 present). Associate Professor, Department of Philosophy (July 1, 2010 June 30, 2013). Assistant Professor, Department of Philosophy (July 1, 2004- June 30, 2010). Director, Master of Arts and Liberal Studies program in Mind and Brain Studies (July 2004-January 2006). 1

Postdoctoral fellowship: In cognitive neuroimaging with PET and fmri, with Dr. Steven E. Petersen and Dr. Marcus E. Raichle, Malinckrodt Institute of Radiology, Washington University Medical School, St. Louis, MO (1995-1997). Visiting positions: Other Employment: Visiting faculty, University of Washington (summer 2011). Visiting fellow, Tanner Center, University of Utah (January-July 2009). ARC fellow, Department of Philosophy, University of Sydney (July 2006- September 2007). Visiting fellow, Australian National University (summer 2004). Adjunct, Simon Fraser University, Department of Philosophy (September 2000-June 2004). Senior Editor, Neuron, Cell Press, Cambridge MA (1997-1999). CITIZENSHIP USA, Canada AREAS OF SPECIALIZATION Philosophy of Science, Philosophy of Cognitive Science, Philosophy of Mind AREAS OF COMPETENCE Ethics, Epistemology, Metaphysics RECENT AWARDS and DISTINCTIONS: Major awards and fellowships: John M. Manley Huntington Award for Newly Promoted Faculty, 2013. The Stanton Award, Society for Philosophy and Psychology, 2011. Mellon New Directions Fellowship, Mellon Foundation, 2011-2013. Laurence S. Rockefeller Visiting Fellowship, Princeton University, 2011-2012. Big Questions in Free Will Underpinnings grant, Templeton Foundation, 2011. Big Questions in Free Will Science grant, Templeton Foundation, 2011. Melville and Leila Straus 1960 Faculty Fellowship, 2010-2011. Project Fellow, MacArthur Project in Law and Neuroscience, 2007-2010. 2

NEH collaborative research grant Free will and moral responsibility: implications of advances in neuroscience 2008-2010. Dartmouth Junior Faculty Fellowship, 2009. Australian Research Council APD fellowship, Sydney University, 2006-8. The William James Prize, Society for Philosophy and Psychology, 2002. Smaller grants and distinctions: Leslie Humanities Center grant for hosting MPRG workshop, 2013. Visiting professorship, CNR, Rome, Italy. December 2011. Dickey center travel grant to present paper at international meeting, 2011. Elected to Sigma Xi, 2008. DCAL grant to attend Ken Bain s Best Teachers Summer Institute, 2008. Dickey center travel grant to present paper at international meeting, 2008. Leslie Humanities Institute Fellowship, (with John Kulvicki), for The Art of Science, January 2005. PUBLICATIONS: Books Morse, S.J. and A. L. Roskies (2013) A Primer on Criminal Law and Neuroscience. Oxford University Press: New York. Peer-reviewed journal articles 1. Roskies, A.L. (submitted) Davidson on believers: Can nonlinguistic creatures have propositional attitudes? MIND. 2. Roskies, A.L. and B.F. Malle, (2013) A Strawsonian look at desert Philosophical Explorations, 16: 133-152. 3. Schlegel, A., Alexander, P., Sinnott-Armstrong, W., Roskies, A.L., Tse, P. and T. Wheatley (2013) Barking up the wrong free: readiness potentials reflect processes independent of conscious will. Experimental Brain Research, 229:329-335. 4. Roskies, A.L., Schweitzer, N.J. and M.J. Saks (2013) Neuroimages in court: Less biasing than feared. Trends in Cognitive Sciences, 17:99-101. 5. Roskies, A.L. (2012) Don t panic: On being a causa sui Philosophical Perspectives, 26:323-342. 3

6. Roskies, A.L. (2012) How does the neuroscience of decision making bear on our understanding of moral responsibility and free will?" Current Opinions in Neurobiology, 22:1 5. 7. Shadlen, M.N. and A. L. Roskies (2012) The neurobiology of decision making and responsibility: Reconciling mechanism and mindedness Frontiers in Neuroscience, 6: 56: 1-12. 8. Schweitzer, N. J., Saks, M.J., Murphy, E.R., Roskies, A.L., Sinnott-Armstrong, W., and L. M. Gaudet (2011) Neuroimages as evidence in a mens rea defense: No Impact Psychology, Public Policy, and Law, 17: 357-392. 9. Roskies, A.L. (2010) That response won t work: Against a demonstrative defense of conceptualism Nous, 44: 112-134. 10. Roskies, A.L. (2010) Saving Subtraction: A reply to Van Orden and Paap British Journal for the Philosophy of Science, 61:635-665. 11. Roskies, A.L. (2010) How does neuroscience affect our conception of volition? Annual Review of Neuroscience, 33: 109-130. 12. Roskies, A.L. (2009) Brain-mind and structure-function relationships: A methodological response to Coltheart Philosophy of Science, 76: 927-939. 13. Roskies, A.L. and S. Nichols (2008) Bringing moral responsibility down to earth Journal of Philosophy, 105: 371-388. 14. Roskies, A.L. (2008) Robustness and the new riddle revived Ratio, 21: 218-230. 15. Roskies, A.L. (2008) A new argument for nonconceptual content Philosophy and Phenomenological Research, 76: 633-659. 16. Roskies, A.L. (2008) Neuroimaging and inferential distance Neuroethics, 1: 19-30. 17. Roskies, A.L. (2007) Are neuroimages like photographs of the brain? Philosophy of Science, 74: 860-872. 18. Roskies, A.L. (2006) Patients with ventromedial frontal damage have moral beliefs Philosophical Psychology. 19: 617-627. 19. Roskies, A. L. (2006) Neuroscientific challenges to free will and responsibility Trends in Cognitive Sciences, 10: 419-423. 20. Roskies, A.L. (2003) Are ethical judgments intrinsically motivational? Lessons from acquired sociopathy Philosophical Psychology, 16: 51-66. 4

21. Roskies, A.L. (2002) Neuroethics for the New Millenium Neuron, 35:21-23. 22. Yates*, P.A., Roskies*, A.L., McLaughlin, T., and D.D.M. O'Leary (2001) "Topographic specific axon branching controlled by ephrin-as is the critical event in retinotectal map development" Journal of Neuroscience, 21: 8548-8563. (* denotes co-first authorship) 23. Roskies, A.L., Fiez, J.A., Balota, D.A., and S.E. Petersen (2001) Task-dependent modulation of regions in left inferior frontal cortex during semantic processing Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience, 13:1-16. 24. Roskies, A.L., Friedman, G.C., and D.D.M. O'Leary (1995) "Mechanisms and molecules controlling the development of retinal maps" Perspectives in Developmental Neurobiology, 3: 63-75. 25. Roskies, A.L. and D.D.M. O'Leary (1994) "Control of topographic retinal axon branching by inhibitory membrane-bound molecules" Science, 265: 799-803. 26. Simon, D.K., Roskies A.L. and D.D.M. O'Leary (1994) "Plasticity in the development of topographic order in the mammalian retinocollicular projection" Developmental Biology, 162: 384-393. 27. Roskies, A.L. (1994) "Mapping memory with positron emission tomography" Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences USA 91: 1989-1991. Book chapters and solicited journal articles. Many of these are peerreviewed: 1. Roskies, A.L. (in press) Monkey decision-making as a model for human decisionmaking. In Surrounding Free Will. Mele, A. (ed.). 2. Roskies, A.L. (in press) Mindreading and Privacy. The New Cognitive Neurosciences. Gazzaniga, M. (Ed.), MIT Press. 3. Roskies, A.L. (in press) Mind-reading, lie detection, and privacy. Handbook of Neuroethics, Springer. 4. Roskies, A.L. (in press) Introduction to neuroimaging neuroethics. Handbook of Neuroethics, Springer. 5

5. Roskies, A.L. (in press) How can neuroscience contribute to philosophical methodology? In Handbook of Philosophical Methodology, Gendler,T. and J. Hawthorne (eds.) Oxford University Press. 6. Roskies, A.L. (2013) Can neuroscience resolve issues about free will? In Moral Psychology: Volume 4, Free Will and Moral Responsibility, Sinnott-Armstrong, W. (ed.), MIT Press: Cambridge MA: 103-126. 7. Roskies, A.L. (2013) Response to commentators. In Moral Psychology: Volume 4, Free Will and Moral Responsibility, Sinnott-Armstrong, W. (ed.), MIT Press: Cambridge MA: 151-155. 8. Roskies, A.L. (2013) The neuroscience of volition in Decomposing the Will, Vierkant, T. and A. Clark (eds.), Oxford University Press: 33-59. 9. Roskies, A.L. (2012) Neuroimages, pedagogy and society In The Educated Eye: Visual Culture, Learning, and the Life Sciences, Anderson, N. and M. R. Dietrich (eds.). 10. Roskies, A.L. (2011) Triangulation and objectivity: Squaring the circle? In Triangulation: From an Epistemological Point of View, Amoretti, C.M. and Preyer, G. (eds.), Ontos Verlag, Frankfurt: 97-102. 11. Roskies, A.L. (2011) A puzzle about empathy Emotion Review, 3: 278-280. 12. Roskies, A.L. and Sinnott-Armstrong, W. (2011) Brain images as evidence in the criminal law In Law and Neuroscience, Freeman, M. (ed.) Oxford University Press: 97-114. 13. Roskies, A.L. (2011) Why Libet s studies don t pose a threat to free will In Conscious Will and Responsibility, Sinnott-Armstrong, W. and L. Nadel (eds.) pp. 11-22. 14. Sinnott-Armstrong, W., & Roskies, A. (2010). Alfred R. Mele's Effective Intentions: The Power of Conscious Will. Philosophical Books, 51(3), 127-143. 15. Schroeder, T., Roskies A.L, and S. Nichols (2010) Moral motivation In The Moral Psychology Handbook, Doris, J. and S. Stich (eds.) Oxford University Press: 72-110. 16. Roskies, A.L. (2010) "Esiste la libertà se decidono i nostri neuroni", in M. De Caro, A. Lavazza, G. Sartori (eds.), Siamo davvero liberi? Le neuroscienze e il mistero del libero arbitrio, Codice, Torino 2010, pp. 51-70. (Translation of Roskies, A.L. (2010) Freedom, neural mechanism, and consciousness In Free Will and Consciousness: How Might They Work?,) 6

17. Roskies, A.L. (2010) Freedom, neural mechanism, and consciousness In Free Will and Consciousness: How Might They Work?, Baumeister, R. F., Mele, A. R., and K. D. Vohs, (eds.) Oxford University Press: 153-171. 18. Roskies, A.L. (2010) Neuroimaging and inferential distance: The perils of pictures In Foundational Issues in Human Brain Mapping, Bunzl, M. and S. J. Hansen (eds.) MIT Press: 195-215. 19. Roskies, A.L. (2009) What s Neu in Neuroethics In The Oxford Handbook of Philosophy and Neuroscience, Bickle, J. (ed.) Oxford University Press: 454-470. 20. Sinnott-Armstrong, W., Roskies, A.L., Brown T. and E. Murphy (2008) Brain images as legal evidence Episteme: A Journal of Social Epistemology, 5: 359-373. 21. Gold, I. and A.L. Roskies (2008) Philosophy of neuroscience In Oxford Handbook of Philosophy of Biology, Ruse, M. (ed.) Oxford University Press: 349-380. 22. Roskies, A.L. (2007) Neuroethics beyond genethics, EMBO Reports 8, S1, S52 S56. 23. Roskies, A.L. (2007) Internalism and the evidence from pathology In Moral Psychology, vol 3: The neuroscience of morality, Sinnott-Armstrong, W. (ed.), MIT Press. 191-206. 24. Roskies, A.L. (2005) "A case study in neuroethics: The nature of moral judgment" In Neuroethics: Defining the Issues in Research, Practice, and Policy. Illes, J. (ed.) Oxford University Press. 17-32. 25. Roskies, A.L. (2005) We are Borg Biology and Philosophy, 20: 611-622. 26. Roskies, A.L. (2004) Everyday Neuromorality Cerebrum, 6: 58-65. 27. Roskies, A.L. (2003) Neuroimaging della funzione cognitiva In Storia della Scienza, Petruccioli, S. (ed.) Istituto della Enciclopedia Italiana, Roma. V. IX, pp.709-722. 28. Roskies, A.L. and S.E. Petersen (2001) Visualizing human brain function In Frontiers of Life, vol III: The Intelligent Systems, Part One: The Brain of Homo Sapiens, Bizzi, E., P. Calissano, V. Volterra (eds.) Academic Press: 87-109. 29. Roskies, A.L. (1999) "Introduction to the binding problem" Neuron, 24:7-9. 30. Roskies, A.L. and S.E. Petersen (1999) Visualizzare il funzionamento del cervello In Frontiere della Vita. Vol III, I sistemi intelligenti, Bizzi, E., P. Calissano, V. Volterra (eds.) Istituto dell Enciclopedia Italiana: 75-96. 7

31. Roskies, A.L. and C.C. Wood (1992) "A Parliament of the Mind" The Sciences, May/June: 44-50. Short Publications: 1. Roskies, A.L. (2014) Free Will: Thirty points of view. In Bonicalzi S. and M. De Caro. Methode. Analytic Perspectives, vol. 2, No 3. 2. Roskies, A.L. (2013) Neuroethics Cambridge Dictionary of Philosophy. 3. Roskies, A.L. (2012) Moral Responsibility: A Social Issue: Why "My Brain Made Me Do It" Is a Poor Excuse BeingHuman.org. http://www.beinghuman.org/article/moral-responsibility-social-issue 4. Roskies, A.L. (2010) Neuroethics: Considering its scope and limits The American Journal of Bioethics: Neuroscience 1(4): 1-2. 5. Roskies, A.L. (2010) How is neuroscience likely to impact the law in the long run? A Judge s Guide to Neuroscience: A concise introduction. Mansfield, A., Gazzaniga, M.S. and J.Rakoff (Eds.) The MacArthur Law and Neuroscience Project: 66-71. 6. Roskies, A.L., and W. Sinnott-Armstrong (2008) "Between a Rock and a Hard Place: Thinking about Morality" In Lehrer, J. (ed.) Scientific American Mind. http://www.scientificamerican.com/article.cfm?id=thinking-about-morality. 7. Roskies, A.L. (2008) A neuroscientific challenge to free will and responsibility? Trends in Cognitive Sciences, 12: 4. 8. Roskies, A.L. (2007) The illusion of personhood The American Journal of Bioethics: Neuroscience. 7: 55-57. 9. Roskies, A.L. (2006) Patricia Kitcher Macmillan Encyclopedia of Philosophy. Borchert, D. (ed.) vol. 5, 2nd edition. Macmillan Reference USA: 76-77. 10. Roskies, A.L. (1998) "Dissecting semaphorin signalling" Neuron, 21: 935-936. 11. Roskies, A.L. and C.C. Wood (1992) "Cinema 1-2-Many of the Mind" Behavioral and Brain Sciences, June: 221-223. 12. Roskies, A.L. (1990) "Seeing truth or just seeming true?" Behavioral and Brain Sciences, December: 682-683. 8

Book Reviews: 1. Roskies, A.L. (2011) The origins of morality, Review of Braintrust, by P.S. Churchland, Nature, 472: 166. 2. Roskies, A.L. (2010) Science and the Quest for Wisdom, Review of Wisdom: From Philosophy to Neuroscience by S. S. Hall, Nature Neuroscience, 13: 1037. 3. Roskies, A.L. (2010) Review of Paul Thagard s The Brain and the Meaning of Life, Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews, 2010.7.9. http://ndpr.nd.edu/review.cfm?id=20428 4. Roskies, A.L. (2006) What is it like to speed date? Review of Conversations on Consciousness by S. Blakemore, Nature, 349: 394-395. 5. Roskies, A.L. (2001) Yes, but am I free? Review of Neurophilosophy of Free Will by H. Walter, Nature Neuroscience, 4: 1161. 6. Roskies, A.L. (1998) Review of The Myth of Neuropsychology by D. Mender, Philosophical Psychology, 11: 553-556. 7. Roskies, A.L. (1996) Review of Memory in the Cerebral Cortex: An empirical approach to neural networks in the human and nonhuman primate by J. Fuster. Philosophical Psychology, 9: 549-552. Abstracts: 1. Miezin, F.M, Roskies, A.L., Akbudak, E., Ollinger, J.M., Conturo, T.E., Raichle, M.E., and Petersen, S.E. (1997) Characterization of magnitude and spread of fmri response in V1 to discrete visual stimulus Soc. Neurosci. Abstr., 23: 1029. 2. Roskies, A.L., Fiez, J.A., Balota, D.A., Ojemann, J.G., Raichle, M.E., and S.E. Petersen (1996) "PET studies of semantic analysis" Soc. Neurosci. Abstr., 22: 1110. 3. Roskies, A.L. and D.D.M. O'Leary (1994) "Chick retinal axons branch preferentially on membrane stripes derived from topographically appropriate tectum" Soc. Neurosci. Abstr. 20: 1085. 9

4. Roskies, A.L. and D.D.M. O'Leary (1993) "Topographic specificity in retinal axon branching is controlled by a repulsive membrane associated molecule" Soc. Neurosci. Abstr. 19: 237. 5. Roskies, A.L. and D.D.M. O'Leary (1992) "Quantitative analysis of topographic targeting of retinal axons in developing rat superior colliculus" Soc. Neurosci. Abstr. 18:222. 6. Roskies, A., B. Armstrong, D.G. Amaral and T.J. Sejnowski (1990) "A Neuroanatomical Model of Intrinsic Hippocampal Projections, " Soc. Neurosci. Abstr. 16:121. 7. Buzsaki, G., A. Smith, A.L. Roskies, L.J. Fisher, and F.H. Gage (1989) "Parkinsonian Tremor and Petit Mal Epilepsy: Common Mechanisms," Soc. Neurosci. Abstr. 15:125. 8. Buzsaki, G., A.L. Roskies, L.J. Fisher, and F.H. Gage (1989) "Extrapyramidal Control of Neocortical Spike and Wave Activity," Annual Meeting of the American Epilepsy Society, 1989. Book projects: Afloat in Neurath s Boat: The Philosophy of Science of Neuroimaging A philosophical exploration of the technology, foundations, epistemological and ethical issues surrounding functional brain imaging. Draft in progress. What Color is Your Brain? The scope and limits of brain imaging, and what it could mean for society. Draft in progress. INVITED TALKS and CONFERENCE PARTICPATION: 1. Weinberg Symposium, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI. March 2014. Mindreading: Past, Present, and Future 2. Psychiatry Grand Rounds, Geisel School of Medicine. January, 2014. Revisiting Libet: Does neuroscience show we lack free will? 3. Big Questions in Free Will conference, Tallahasee, FL. December 2013. Self-causation 10

4. GRIN, Université de Montréal and McGill University, November 2013. On being a causa sui 5. Cognitive Neuroscience summer school, Lake Tahoe, CA. July 2013. Mindreading and privacy 6. Roma Tre University, Rome, Italy. May 2013. Moral Enhancement 7. Neuroethics Conference, Padova Italy, May 2013. Keynote address: Neuroethics, a decade on. 8. Yale Law School, The Information Society Project, October 2012. Neuroscience in the courtroom: Rethinking the threat. 9. Law and Neuroscience conference, Rutgers Institute for Law and Philosophy & Rutgers School of Law, Camden NJ, September 2012. Neuroscience in the courtroom: Rethinking the threat. 10. Free Will workshop, FSU, Tallahassee FL, June 2012. 2 days of lecture to students of Big Questions in Free Will summer seminar. 11. Brocher Foundation Symposium. "Changing the brain, changing the society: Clinical and Ethical implications of neuromodulation techniques in neurology and psychiatry", Geneva, Switzerland, June 2012. Moral Enhancement 12. Hampshire College Culture, Brain and Development program conference, From NeuroSelves to NeuroSocieties: Cross-Disciplinary Conversations around The Neurosciences and Society Northampton, MA, June 2012. Keynote speaker. Free will and moral responsibility: implications of advances in neuroscience 13. Neuroethics Conference, Padova Italy, May 2012. Freedom, Awareness, and the challenge from the cognitive sciences 14. Federal Judicial Center, Boston MA, May 2012. Law and Neuroscience: A very short Primer 15. Oxford University conference From fmri to Philosophy of Mind, St. Catharine s College, Oxford UK. April 2012. FMRI: Brainreading or Mindreading? 16. Rutgers University Philosophy Colloquium, New Brunswick NJ, April 2012. 11

Of Monkeys and Men 17. University of Pittsburgh/Carnegie Mellon University Graduate Philosophy Confrence, April 2012. Keynote speaker. Of Monkeys and Men 18. Princeton University, Neuroscience of Decision Seminar Series, Princeton NJ, March 2012. Of Monkeys and Men 19. Duke Institute for Brain Sciences, Duke University, Durham NC, January 2012. Do the brain sciences pose a threat to free will? 20. Department of Philosophy, Duke University, Durham NC, January 2012. Of Monkeys and Men 21. Big Questions in Free Will conference, Tallahasee, FL. January 2012. Of Monkeys and Men 22. Roma Tre University, Rome, Italy. December 2011. 23. La Sapienza University, Rome, Italy. December 2011. Free will and Responsibility: Implications of advances in neuroscience. 24. CNR workshop on Law and Neuroscience. Rome Italy. December 2011. Brain scans in the courtroom: Rethinking the threat 25. Centro Nazionale di Ricerca, Rome Italy. December 2011. What is neuroethics? 26. La Sapienza, Rome Italy. December 2011. Freedom and moral responsibility 27. Panelist on free will, Center for Inquiry. New York, NY. November 2011. 28. University of Western Ontario, London, Canada. November 2011. 29. Moral Psychology and Normativity conference, Birmingham, AL. November 2011. Brain scans in the courtroom: Rethinking the threat 30. DeCamp Bioethics Series, Princeton University, Princeton NJ. October 2011. Brain scans in the courtroom: Rethinking the threat 12

31. Scuola Normale Superiore, Pisa, Italy. October 2011. Freedom despite mechanim 32. Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh, PA. October 2011. Brain scans in the courtroom: Rethinking the threat 33. Shadlen Lab, University of Washington, August 2011. Neurophilosophical explorations of free will 34. Society for Philosophy and Psychology/European Society for Philosophy and Psychology joint meeting, Montreal Canada, July 2011. Stanton Prize Lecture. Neurophilosophical explorations of free will 35. Law and Society meeting, San Francisco CA. June 2011. Discussant for Law and Neuroscience symposium. 36. Bielefeld University, Zif Institute. Bielefeld, Germany, May 2011. Neuroscience, Ethics, and the Philosophy of Mind conference. The Neural Basis of Decision-Making and Implications for Moral Responsibility 37. Riga, Latvia, May 2011. Invited speaker, Cognitive Science and Morality conference. The evolution of morality 38. University of Padova, Padova Italy. May 2011. Keynote speaker, Neuroethics conference. Responsibility and the neuroscience of the will 39. Duke University, Durham NC. April 2011. Invited speaker, Free will and responsibility conference. 40. Arizona State University, Tempe Arizona. April 2011. Invited speaker, Origins Conference. The evolution of morality 41. Utah Valley University, Orem Utah. March 2011. Keynote speaker, undergraduate conference. 42. Presidential Commission for the Study of Bioethical Issues, Washington D.C. February, 2011. 13

Asked to present to the commission on bioethical issues arising from neuroscience. 43. Brown University, Providence, RI. February 2011. 44. Puerto Rico Supreme Court Continuing Legal Education (CLE) Program, Halfday workshop. San Juan, Puerto Rico, December 2010. Brain basics Neuroscience evidence in the courtroom Applications 45. Festival della Scienza, Genova, Italy. November 2010. Neurons, mechanism, and free will 46. Pages and Places festival, Scranton PA, October 2010. The Brain and Culture: How Advances in Neuroscience are Changing the Way We Imagine Ourselves 47. Santa Fe Institute, Santa Fe, NM. August, 2010. 48. Federal Judicial Center, Philadelphia PA. July 2010. Neuroscience and the law: Brain basics and applications 49. Society for Philosophy and Psychology, invited talk, June 2010. Don t lie to me: On the applicability of the neuroscience of lie detection 50. University of Geneva, Geneva Switzerland, April 2010 51. Harvard University, Moral Biology Conference, April, 2010. What can morality learn from biology? 52. Indiana Univeristy, Bloomington IN, April 2010. Poynter center neuroethics lecture. 53. Indiana Univeristy, Bloomington IN, April 2010. Keynote speaker, Midwest Undergraduate Cognitive Science conference. A measured look at fmri 54. Bates College, Lewiston ME, March 2010. 14

55. Moral Psychology Research Group, Princeton University, March 2010. The illusion of epistemic proximity and epistemic bias 56. Harvard University Law School and Federal Judicial College, Cambridge MA, March 2010. Neuroscience and the law: Brain basics and applications 57. University Southern California, Los Angeles CA, February 2010. 58. Institut Jean-Nicod, Paris, France. December 2009. 59. Jowett Lecture, Oxford University Department of Philosophy,Oxford England, November 2009. 60. San Raffaele University, Milan, Italy. November 2009. Neuroethics and the challenge to responsibility 61. Roma Tre University, Department of Philosophy, Rome Italy, November 2009. 62. Edinburgh University, Edinburgh Scotland, October 2009. 63. New York State Judicial Institute Judicial Seminars, Tarrytown, NY. August 2009. Neuroscience and the law: Brain basics and applications 64. New York State Judicial Institute Judicial Seminars, Syracuse, NY. July 2009. Neuroscience and the law: Brain basics and applications 65. National Endowment for the Humanities Summer Institute on Experimental Philosophy, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, Utah. July 2009. Workshop on decision and freedom. 66. Current Legal Issues Colloquium on Law and Neuroscience, University College London, London England. July 2009. Brain images as legal evidence. 67. National Judicial College, neuroscience for federal judges, Vanderbilt University, Nashville TN. June 2009. Neuroscience and the law: Brain basics and applications 15

68. Bicocca University, Milan Italy, June 2009. What is neuroethics? 69. University of Oslo, Norway, June 2009. Beyond freedom and resentment: Causation and the atypical perpetrator 70. Florida Advanced Judicial Studies, Sanibel FL, June 2009. One day seminar on law and the brain. 71. Gruter Institute Annual Meeting, Squaw Valley CA, May 2009. How not to approach the question of free will in science and the law. 72. Ponitifical University of the Holy Cross, School of Philosophy, Rome Italy, April 2009. What is the role of empathy in moral behavior? 73. Federal Judicial Center, Seminar on Law and Neuroscience, New York City, March 2009 Neuroscience and the law: Brain basics and free will. Brain images as legal evidence. 74. Maricopa State Judges, Phoenix AZ, March 2009 Neuroscience and the law: Brain basics and free will. Brain images as legal evidence. 75. Bodian seminar, the Mind-Brain Institute, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore MD, February 2009 Freedom despite mechanism. 76. University of Illinois, Chicago, Chicago Illinois, January 2009. Localization and Ontology: Afloat in Neurath s Boat 77. Hastings Center Meeting, Philadelphia, PA, January 2009. Localization and Ontology: Afloat in Neurath s Boat 78. Moral Psychology Workshop, Princeton University, November 2008. Is empathy required for morality? 79. Neuroethics Society Annual Meeting, Washington DC, November 2008. Neurons, mechanism, and freedom of the will 80. Philosophy of Science Association, Pittsburgh, PA. November 2008. Brain-Mind and Structure-Function Relationships: A response to the Ultraneuropsychologist 16

81. Lecture to state judges, September 2008. Minary Center. Neuroscience and the law: Brain basics and free will. Brain images as legal evidence. 82. Annual summer interdisciplinary Conference, Brenta, Italy, July 2008. What can neuroscience tell us about free will? 83. Federal Judicial Center, talks to Federal Judges, June 2008, Stanford, CA. Neuroscience and the law 84. District of Columbia Judges, May 2008 Neuroscience and the law: Brain basics and free will. 85. University of Cincinnatti, May 2008. Neurophilosophy of free will. 86. Neukom Institute Conference, The Human Algorithm, Dartmouth College, Hanover NH, May 2008. Free will Uniquely human? 87. Templeton Foundation meeting, Free will and Consciousness, Amelia Island, FL. April 2008. Freedom, neural mechanism, and consciousness. 88. Association for the Scientific Study of Consciousness, Tucson AZ. April 2008. What do Libet s experiments tell us about free will? 89. Pacific APA Symposium on Moral Psychology, Pasadena CA, March 2008 Moral cognition and brain science. 90. Annual Interdisciplinary Conference, Jackson WY, February 2008. Folk intuitions on freedom and moral responsibility. 91. Technical University, Workshop on the Ethics of Neuroimaging, Delft, Netherlands, October 2007. The illusion of Proximity: Neuroimaging and Inferential Distance. 92. Indiana University, Agency and Responsibility Conference, September 2007. Freedom and Neuroscience. 93. RSSS philosophy, Australian National University, Conference: Experimental Philosophy meets Conceptual Analysis, Canberra, Australia, July 2007. Experimental(ly-informed) Philosophy: Lessons from acquired sociopathy. 17

94. Queensland Brain Institute, University of Queensland, May 2007. Decision-making and freedom. 95. Philosophy department, University of Queensland, May 2007. Bringing moral responsibility down to earth. 96. Mind group, meeting on Neuroethics. Frankfurt, Germany, May 2007 The illusion of proximity Freedom despite mechanism. 97. Understanding Minds and Moral Agency, Holy Cross, Worcester MA, April 2007. Perceiving persons and the problem of other minds. 98. RSSS philosophy, Australian National University, Philsoc lecture, Canberra, Australia, February 2007. Bringing moral responsibility down to earth. 99. EMBO/EMBL, Science and Society meeting: Genes, mind, brain, behavior. Heidelberg, Germany. November 2006. Neuroethics beyond genethics. 100. University of Utah, Workshop on moral psychology, February 2006. The illusion of proximity. 101. AAAS and Arizona State University Law School, Forbidden Science, Phoenix AZ, January 2006. Cognitive enhancement. 102. AAAS and The Library of Congress, Hard Science Hard Choices: Facts, ethics, and policies guiding brain science today, Washington D.C., May 2005. Decision and the brain. 103. AAAS and MIT, The Brain and Us Neuroethics, Responsibility, and the Self. Boston MA, April 2005. Workshop leader. 104. Neural Information Processing Systems, Workshop: Free will and decisionmaking. Vancouver, BC, Canada. December 2005. Neuroethics and freedom of the will. 105. McDonnell Project Meeting, Neurophilosophy, The State of the Art, Pasadena CA June 2005. Neuroethics: The state of the art. 18

106. Center for Bioethics, Neuroethics Workshop, Stanford University, April 2005. Discussant. 107. RSSS philosophy, Australian National University, Philsoc lecture, Canberra, Australia. August 2004. That response won t work: Against a demonstrative defense of conceptualism. 108. Society for Philosophy and Psychology, Barcelona, Spain, July 2004. That response won t work: Against a demonstrative defense of conceptualism. 109. American Neuropsychological Association, After-lunch speaker at the annual meeting. February 2004. Neuroethics for neuropsychiatry. 110. Australasian Society for Cognitive Science, Sydney Australia. July 2003. A new argument for nonconceptual content. 111. Australasian Association of Philosophy, Adelaide, Australia, July 2003. A defense of animal thought. 112. University of Berlin, Keynote Lecture for program in Medical Neurosciences, Berlin, Germany. October 2002. Neuroethics. 113. Society for Philosophy and Psychology, June 2002. Are moral judgments intrinsically motivational? Lessons from acquired sociopathy. 114. Committee on History and Philosophy of Science, University of Maryland, College Park, colloquium speaker, March 2002. Are moral judgments intrinsically motivational? Lessons from acquired sociopathy. 115. Pacific Division APA, March 2002. Are moral judgments intrinsically motivational? Lessons from acquired sociopathy. 116. Annual Interdisciplinary Conference, February 2002. PET studies of semantic processing. 117. MIT, IAP talk series, January 2002. The problem of other minds. 19

118. Vienna International Summer University, Vienna, Austria, July 2001. Are moral judgments intrinsically motivational? Lessons from acquired sociopathy. 119. Memory and Narrative Conference, LSU, October 2001. Memory and narrative. 120. Harvard Careers Forum, April 1998. Speaker on scientific editing. 121. MIT, Brain and Cognitive Sciences, February 1997. PET studies of semantic processing. TEACHING: Courses taught at Dartmouth College: For Philosophy: PHIL 1: Problems in Philosophy (summer 2006, Fall 2008, Fall 2010, Fall 2013) PHIL 3: Reason and Argument (Fall 2004, Fall 2005) PHIL 7: First-year seminar (Spring, 2006) PHIL 27: Philosophy of Science (Winter, 2005; Fall 2005; Fall 2007) PHIL 30: Theory of Knowledge (Spring 2008, Fall 2008) PHIL 35: Philosophy of Mind (Fall 2007, Winter 2011) PHIL 50: Philosophy of Cognitive Science (Spring 2008, Winter 2011, Fall 2013) PHIL 50: Freedom, Responsibility, and the Brain (Fall 2010) For the Master of Arts and Liberal Studies Program: The Philosophy and Psychology of the Self (Fall 2004) Concepts and Conceptual Development (Spring 2005) Introduction to Cognitive Science (Winter, 2006) Other Instruction at Dartmouth College: Honors thesis, Benjamin Feintzeig, Winter/Spring 2011. Independent study, Scott Limbird, Spring 2008. Independent Study, Jim Finney, Summer 2006. Independent Study, Alexis Mourenoz, MALS, Summer 2006. Independent Study, Nathan Clarke, winter 2006. Presidential Scholar mentor for Nathan Clarke, fall 2005. 20

OTHER PROFESSIONAL ACTIVITIES Service to Dartmouth: Coordinator, Cognitive Science Program 2013-present Steering committee, Linguistics and Cognitive Science program, 2006-2013. First-year-student Advisor, 2004-2006, 2007-2008. Honors thesis advisor, Benjamin Feintzeig, Winter/Spring 2011. Honors thesis reader, Michael Milne, Spring 2008. Masters Thesis reader for Alexis Mourenoz, MALS 2007. Masters Thesis reader for Craig Tiede, MALS, 2005-6. Faculty advisor for Dartmouth Women s Volleyball team, 2004-present. Developed curriculum for MALS concentration in Cognitive Science; Proposal for MALS concentration in Cognitive Science, passed March 2005. Admissions Committee, MALS, 2005. Service to the profession: Executive committee member, Society for Philosophy and Psychology, 2010-present. Member of the Scientific Committee of CeSEP, the Centre for Public Ethics Studies at San Raffaele University. Liason between the AAAS Neuroscience section and the American Philosophical Association Editorial board membership: Philosophy Compass, Blackwell, 2006-present; Neuroethics, Springer, 2007-present. Frontiers in Theoretical and Philosophical Psychology, 2010-present. Programme committees: Society for Philosophy and Psychology, 2010-2011. Neuroethics Society Annual Meeting, 2009-2010. McDonnell Project Workshop and Conference on Neurophilosophy, The State of the Art, Caltech, June 2005. Programme review committee for Society for Philosophy and Psychology Annual Meeting, 2006, 2009. Reviewer of journal articles for: American Journal of Bioethics American Philosophical Quarterly Biology and Philosophy British Journal for the Philosophy of Science Canadian Journal of Philosophy 21

Cognitive Science Dialectica Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience Journal of Ethics and Social Philosophy Mind Nature Neuroscience Neuroethics Neuroscience Imaging Philosophia Philosophical Explorations Philosophical Papers Philosophical Psychology Philosophical Studies Philosophy Compass Philosophy of Science Psychological Bulletin Synthese Trends in Cognitive Sciences Reviewer of book proposals: Oxford University Press MIT Press Polity Press International grant reviews: Council for the Humanities of the Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research Research Council of Norway The Welcome Foundation Affiliate: Center for Philosophy and History of Science, Boston University 22